Acclaimed Montréal-based singer/songwriter, musician, actor and activist Elisapie was born and raised in Salluit, a small village in Nunavik, Québec’s northernmost region. In this extremely remote community, accessible only by plane, she was raised by an extended, yet slightly dysfunctional adoptive family. Growing up in Salluit, she lived through the loss of cousins who ended their lives, experienced young love, danced the night away at the village’s community center and witnessed first hand, the effects of colonialism — i.e., poverty, hopelessness, alcoholism, suicide, and more.
Much like countless bright and ambitious young people across the world, the Salluit-born artist moved to the big city — in this case, Montréal to study and, ultimately, pursue a career in music. Since then, her work whether within the confines of a band or as a solo artist constantly displays her unconditional attachment to her native territory, its people, and to her language, Inuktitut. Spoken for millennia, Inuktitut embodies the harshness of its environment and the wild yet breathtaking beauty of the Inuit territory. Thematically, her work frequently pairs Inuit themes and concerns with modern rock music, mixing tradition with modernity in a deft, seamless fashion.
She won her first Juno Award as a member of Taima, and since stepping out into the spotlight as a solo artist, her work has received rapturous critical acclaim: 2018’s The Ballad of the Runaway Girl was shortlisted for the Polaris Music Prize, and earned her a number of Association du disque, de l’industrie du spectacle Québeécois (ADISQ) Felix Awards and a Juno Award nod. She followed up with a performance with the Orchestre Métropolitain de Montréal — at the invitation of Grammy Award-winning maestro Yannick Nézet Séguin — at Central Park SummerStage, a NPR Tiny Desk Session and headlining or festival sets both locally and internationally.
In her native Canada, she is also known as an actor, starring in the TV series Motel Paradis and C.S. Roy’s experimental indie film VFC, which was released last year. She has also graced the cover of a number of magazines including Châtelaine, Elle Québec and a long list of others. And as a devoted activist, she created and produced the first nation-wide broadcast TV show to celebrate National Indigenous People’s Day.
Her fourth solo album, last year’s Inuktitut features inventive re-imaginings of songs by Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Blondie, Fleetwood Mac, Metallica and more. Each of the acts and artists covered have warmly given their blessing to receive the acclaimed Canadian artist’s unique treatment. Fittingly, each song is imbued with depth and purpose, as the album’s material is an act of cultural re-appropriation that reinvigorates the poetry of these beloved songs by placing them within Inuit traditions.
Through the album’s 10 songs, the acclaimed Inuk tells her story and offers these songs as a loving gift to her community, making her language and culture resonate well beyond the borders of the Inuit territory. But the album is also a testament to the power and remarkable universality of pop music, a reminder of the universality of human life, and fittingly an ode to the experiences, memories, places and people, who have shaped us.
Almost a year since the release of Inuktitut, the JOVM mainstay returns with “Quviasukkuvit (If It Makes You Happy),” her take on the Sheryl Crow smash-hit that also took over the Nunavik radio airwaves when the Inuk artist was still a teen. Produced by close collaborator, singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Joe Grass and translated into Inuktitut, Elisapie’s turns the twangy power ballad into a meditative and dreamily atmospheric tune anchored around some shoegazer-like textures and broodingly cinematic arrangements. The Inuk artist’s smoky and achingly tender delivery ethereally floats over the arrangement, expressing a nostalgic yearning for a time, a place and people that you can’t get back.
Much like the songs on Inuktitut, “Quviasukkuvit (If It Makes You Happy)” is inspired by one of Elisapie’s childhood memories:
“An image that always comes to mind, no matter where I travel or live, is of the people dancing at the magical and dramatic Ikkarivvik Bar in Kuujjuaq,” the acclaimed Inuk artist says. “In my mind’s eye, it is always Friday night, and the moon is full. Most people are either a little drunk or very drunk. The bar and the dancefloor are an escape, and people dance to forget and escape. I recognize so many faces and I can see their smiles and closed eyes as they dance.
‘If It Makes You Happy’ was so popular in the North, and it reminds me so much of when I was a teenager. It played on TV and radio, and we listened to it at home. Those lines made us want to scream along with Sheryl. Her song liberates my people in the North, giving them the words to shout about being sad without feeling ashamed.”
When I perform this song, it has Sheryl Crow’s enthusiasm, but my Inuit sensibility slows it down, echoing the rhythm of the land.”
The accompanying video continues the JOVM mainstays’s ongoing collaboration with Phillipe Léonard. Shot in a striking black and white and employing an array of shadows while we see the acclaimed Inuk artist swaying and singing the song in a gorgeous, bird-like white outfit. Occasionally, we see projections of the harsh yet beautiful landscape, she was born in.
“Elisapie is an artist who can transcend darkness to bring out light and hope,” Léonard explains . “I wanted to pay tribute to what this woman of immeasurable strength means to me. This choreography of shadows is inspired by the stratified mineral landscape of Salluit, where this Qupanuaq (bird) was born.”
Having already won the Juno Award for Contemporary Indigenous Artist or Group of the Year earlier this year, the JOVM mainstay is currently in the running for the Polaris Music Prize, which will be awarded at Toronto’s Massey Hall on September 17.
Adding to a busy year, the acclaimed Salluit-born, Montréal-based artist will perform, the Émilie Monnet-produced Uvattini (which means “home” in her native Inuktitut) three times this year: September 28, 2024 at Vancouver’s Chan Centre; December 9, 2024 at Québec City’s Grand Théâtre de Québec; and December 11, 2024 at Montréal’s MTLLEUS. The show combines music, storytelling, video and performance. Shows in Sherbrooke, QC and Brossard ON are planed for next year.
Additionally, she has about twenty shows scheduled between now and 2025 — and it includes an extremely rare October 5, 2025 stop at Joe’s Pub. For more information you can visit her website: https://www.elisapie.com. As always, tour dates are below.
Tour dates
14/09/2024 Abiquiu, NM – Ghost Ranch Music Festival
28/09/2024 Vancouver, BC – Chan Centre for the Performing Arts – UVATTINI
30/09/2024 Calgary, AB – National Music Center – Studio Bell
05/10/2024 New York, NY – Joe’s Pub
08/11/2024 Toronto, ON – The Opera House
14/11/2024 Terrebonne, QC – Théâtre du Vieux-Terrebonne SOLD OUT
15/11/2024 Saint Damien, QC – Maison de la culture de Bellechasse SOLD OUT
16/11/2024 Saint-Casimir, QC – Les Grands Bois SOLD OUT
21/11/2024 Sainte-Thérèse, QC – Théâtre Lionel-Groulx
22/11/2024 Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, QC – Théâtre Le Patriote SOLD OUT
23/11/2024 LaSalle, QC – Théâtre Desjardins
29/11/2024 Saint-Hyacinthe, QC – Centre des arts Juliette-Lassonde SOLD OUT
30/11/2024 Trois-Rivières, QC – Salle Anaïs-Allard-Rousseau SOLD OUT
09/12/2024 Québec City, QC – Grand Théâtre de Québec – UVATTINI
11/12/2024 Montréal, QC – MTELUS – UVATTINI
14/12/2024 Verchères, QC – L’Église du Village
04/04/2025 Brossard, QC – Théâtre Manuvie – UVATTINI
05/04/2025 Ottawa, ON – National Arts Centre – Baps Theater – UVATTINI
24/04/2025 Saguenay, QC – Théâtre C – Festival Jazz et Blues de Saguenay – UVATTINI
25/04/2025 Sherbrooke, QC – Granada – UVATTINI
26/04/2025 L’Assomption, QC – Théâtre Hector-Charland – UVATTINI
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